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Fort Caroline National Memorial
IUCN category V (protected landscape/seascape)
Fort Caroline moat FOCA1566
Map showing the location of Fort Caroline National Memorial
Red pog
Location Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Coordinates 30°23′13″N 81°30′2″W / 30.38694°N 81.50056°W / 30.38694; -81.50056Coordinates: 30°23′13″N 81°30′2″W / 30.38694°N 81.50056°W / 30.38694; -81.50056
Area 138.39 acres (0.56 km2)
Established January 16, 1953
Visitors 145,736 (in 2005)
Governing body National Park Service
Fort caroline

Fort Caroline shown in an old etching

Founding of Fort Caroline mg 0318

Founding of Fort Caroline

Fort Caroline was the first French colony in the present-day United States. Established in what is now Jacksonville, Florida, on June 22, 1564, under the leadership of René Goulaine de Laudonnière, it was intended as a refuge for the Huguenots. It lasted one year before being obliterated in 1565 by Pedro Menendez, commander of a Spanish fleet that surprised the French at La Caroline [1] who built their own fort at the site, later abandoned in 1569.[2] The site is now operated as Fort Caroline National Memorial, a unit of the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve. For related events, see: Timeline of the colonization of North America.

History[]

Charlesfort (1562)[]

A French expedition, organized by Protestant leader Admiral Gaspard de Coligny and led by the French Explorer Jean Ribault, had landed at the site on the May River (now the St. Johns River) in February 1562, before moving north to Port Royal Sound. There, on present-day Parris Island, South Carolina, Ribault encountered the Timucuans who were led by Chief Saturiwaleft. From this point, Ribault had twenty-eight men to build a settlement known as Charlesfort. Ribault then returned to Europe to arrange supplies for the new colony, but was arrested in England due to complications arising from the French Wars of Religion, which prevented his return.

Without supplies or leadership, and beset by hostility from the native populations, all but one of the colonists sailed back to Europe after only a year. During their voyage in an open boat, they were reduced to cannibalism before the survivors were rescued in English waters.[3]

Fort Caroline (1564)[]

Floride francaise Pierre du Val

Floride françoise ("French Florida"), by Pierre du Val, 17th century.

Meanwhile, René Goulaine de Laudonnière, who had been Ribault's second-in-command on the 1562 expedition, led a contingent of around 200 new settlers back to Florida, where they founded Fort Caroline (or Fort de la Caroline) atop St. Johns Bluff on June 22, 1564. The fort was named for King Charles IX of France. For just over a year, this colony was beset by hunger, Indian attacks, and mutiny, and attracted the attention of Spanish authorities who considered it a challenge to their control over the area.[citation needed]

In June 1565, Ribault had been released from English custody, and Coligny sent him back to Florida. In late August, Ribault arrived at Fort Caroline, with a large fleet and hundreds of soldiers and settlers, and took command of the settlement. However, the recently appointed Spanish Governor of Florida, Don Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, had simultaneously been dispatched from Spain with orders to remove the French outpost, and arrived within days of Ribault's landing. After a brief skirmish between Ribault's ships and Menéndez's ships, the latter retreated 35 miles (56 km) southward, where they established the settlement of St. Augustine. Ribault pursued the Spanish with several of his ships and most of his troops, but he was surprised at sea by a violent storm lasting several days. Menéndez marched his forces overland, launching a surprise dawn attack on the Fort Caroline garrison which contained 200 to 250 people. The only survivors were about 50 women and children who were taken prisoner and a few defenders, including Laudonnière, who managed to escape; the rest were massacred.[4]

As for Ribault's fleet, all of the ships either sank or ran aground south of St. Augustine during the storm, and many of the Frenchmen onboard were lost at sea. Ribault and his marooned sailors were located by Menéndez with his troops and summoned to surrender. Apparently believing that his men would be well treated, Ribault capitulated. Menéndez then executed Ribault and several hundred Huguenots (French Protestants) as heretics at what is now known as the Matanzas Inlet. The atrocity shocked Europeans even in that bloody era of religious strife.[5] A fort built much later, Fort Matanzas, is in the vicinity of the site. This massacre put an end to France's attempts at colonization of the southeastern Atlantic coast of North America.

The Spanish destroyed Fort Caroline, but built their own fort on the same site. In April 1568, Dominique de Gourgues led a French force which attacked, captured and burned the fort. He then slaughtered the Spanish prisoners in revenge for the 1565 massacre.[5] The Spanish rebuilt, but permanently abandoned the fort the following year. The exact location of the settlement is not known.

Fort Caroline (20th Century reproductions)[]

Timucuan chickee

Timucuan chickee reproduction

The original site of Fort de la Caroline has never been determined, but it is believed to have been located near the present day Fort Caroline National Memorial. The National Park Service constructed an outdoor exhibit of the original fort in 1964, but it was destroyed by Hurricane Dora in the same year.[6][7] Today, the second replica, a near full-scale "interpretive model" of the original Fort de la Caroline, also constructed and maintained by the National Park Service, illustrates the modest defenses upon which the 16th-century French colonists depended.[8]

See also[]

  • List of French possessions and colonies

References[]

  1. Horowitz, Tony (2008) A voyage long and strange
  2. Morris, p. 470
  3. Sixteenth Century North America, Carl Ortwin Sauer, University of California Press, 1971, p. 197
  4. "The End of the Colony", National Parks Service.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Morison, p. 470
  6. http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/geo-flor/22.htm
  7. http://www.nps.gov/timu/historyculture/collections.htm
  8. http://www.floridaparks.com/floridanationalparks/fortcaroline.htm
Sources
  • The National Parks: Index 2001–2003. Washington: U.S. Department of the Interior.
  • Morison, S. E. The European Discovery of America: The Northern Voyages AD 500-1600. New York: Oxford Press, 1971.
  • McGrath, John T. The French in Early Florida: In the Eye of the Hurricane. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2000.

External links[]

Fort Caroline  –  Related navpages
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The original article can be found at Fort Caroline and the edit history here.
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